sholio: sun on winter trees (Highlander-Methos sword)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2011-04-05 05:16 pm
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Highlander mid-season-five 2-parter

Wow. That was seriously epic. This show! *catches breath*

And the Horsemen of the Apocalypse thing ... did not see that coming AT ALL. Well, okay, having seen those clips of barbarian!Methos did spoil me for that twist once the episode got underway (as soon as Cassandra brought up the horsemen, my reaction was "HOSHIT METHOS"), but yeah ... again with managing to remain unspoiled for what is probably one of the easiest spoilers to run across in the whole fandom. *g*

I'm still processing a lot of it. I love, as always, how complicated the show makes things -- it's not as simple as Methos going along with Kronos & co. out of fear, or because they're his friends, or because he's tempted by what they're offering, but perhaps a little of all three, in different measures depending on the moment. I liked seeing the less pleasant side of Duncan's moral absolutism: that it's both a strength and a failing of his. I liked the recognition that the Bronze Age Eurasian world was rough and cruel and brutal (Cassandra's fate -- captured, raped, her people killed -- was the fate of a lot of women in her time), but also that the same kind of cruelty and brutality still exists today (the Vietnam comparison -- that whole conversation with Joe and Duncan -- was brilliant).

I suspect that when I dive into the fanworks for this show that I'm going to find a lot of stories in which Methos is written as a guilt-ridden woobie, and, I don't know, I guess one of the things I really love about him is that he's not? I don't get the impression that he's sitting around being eaten up with guilt for those days. He just doesn't want to do it again; like he says at one point, it was a phase he went through, and now he's moved on. Which is not to say that he doesn't have regrets or guilt at all -- obviously he does for specific things (like what happened to Cassandra). But, again, not to the consuming level, and I don't think he hates himself for it or anything.

I don't think anything in these episodes changed my general impressions of Methos that I was talking about in the last post, but it added a lot of depth and complexity.

So, yeah ... still pondering the character stuff in the episodes, still kind of blown away by the action and the epic scope.
calime: Kronos and Methos heads wreathed in leaves (old gods)

[personal profile] calime 2011-04-07 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, re: Kronos-Methos power dynamics - I'm not 100% sure it's so one-sided as that. YMMV, of course, and my viewpoint may be skewed by fandom, though I recall having similar thoughts back when i first saw the Horsemen arc, when I had no idea what a fandom was...
Anyways, I'd think that another valid interpretation is not that Kronos has Methos under his thumb all the way, allways, but it's a more two-way (fourway?) tangled web. Let's not forget that in the view of the Game, and the world itself being the way it is - to call someone brother for 1000 years ... it implies more than just 'I follow him 'cause I'm afraid of him and also think he's a manly ideal', also, it carries a hell of a loead of emotional baggage (not to mention that back at the good ol' bronze age days looting and raping was not morally wrong, but rather a good way to obtain a golden seat in Valhalla of your choice).
So, for whatever reason, Methos has changed - methinks first he just got bored, but, whatever (also, ther's an outtake with ridiculous wigs pertaining to the topic), he leaves. Kronos ... maybe isn't bored yet. Maybe he has ownership/jealousy issues. Maybe he's just lonely.
And now he shows up after centuries ... ready to disintegrate Methos' Adam persona. Yes, that makes Methos afraid. And probably he is not sure Kronos would not take his head. But I don't think fear is the only motivator here. It's also that he still cares at some level for at least Kronos and Silas (the latter one more easily, obviously), or at least he cares for the memory of the best moments of the bloody havoc-wreaking brotherhood. So, another, more complicated twist. It's kind of rather obvious that Methos has problems about killing Kronos himself, and I don't really think that it is just fear that holds him back.
So, long ramble short, with Methos and Kronos, I tent to see them more in a swinging, switching power type of relationship, one with strong connotations of co-dependency.
Um, also, I hope you don't consider it a spoiler, but there's a bit of a fannish ideas that draw parallels between some personality facets of Methos' ... fascinations? - as in some subtle simialrities between Kronos and Duncan, and I personally find this line of meta kind of fascinating.
trobadora: (Default)

[personal profile] trobadora 2011-04-08 08:05 am (UTC)(link)
when they ran into situations like the Cassandra thing, Methos yielded to him.

I tend to see the Cassandra thing as the beginning of the end of the Horsemen myself, so I'm not sure how well it works as an example of their dynamic during Methos's worst days. But you never know; it might be.

And I think Methos could have killed Kronos if he'd really wanted to - not in an open fight, maybe, but hell, even Kronos has to sleep some time, you know? Or a gun would do the trick. (Methos is good at not playing fair, after all.) But he didn't really want to - part of him still loved Kronos even while he was afraid of him.

Btw, I find it really interesting that you weren't sure Methos wouldn't actively turn against Duncan - it's something that never really occurred to me.

He also had a perfect opportunity to kill Cassandra at the warehouse, and didn't.

In fact, he saved her life - her Voice didn't work against Kronos, and she was no match for him with a sword.
trobadora: (Default)

[personal profile] trobadora 2011-04-10 12:33 am (UTC)(link)
I'm going to have to recheck the timeline ... I'm not really sure about it now that I think about it.

which is a delightfully complicated picture: Methos, seeking knowledge as well as destruction, relaxing at the end of a hard day of pillaging and raping by writing in his journal

That made me laugh. :D I can so imagine that!

I'm not entirely sure of all of his motivations for helping Kronos get the band back together

There are so many possibilities there, and I don't think it's just one reason. But at least part of it, I'm sure, was that if it had to end (and it had to, with Duncan after Kronos knowing what he knows now), it should end completely.

I don't think Methos is completely unwilling to betray or attempt to harm a friend -- he turned against Silas, after all, though only when Silas really forced his hand. But it does seem like loyalty is one of his overriding traits, to the few people that he gives his loyalty to.

I agree with this completely.

think in some ways he's a more loyal person than Duncan is (much as I adore Duncan ...) because Duncan will act against his friends' interests if he has to for the greater good.

Yeah, like we've discussed before, with Duncan it's abstract principles, and with Methos it's always personal. And they're neither of them completely wrong, which is why they're good for each other in my opinion.